Thread: Who wrote this?
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May 28th 2012, 10:41 AM #106
Re: Who wrote this?
For one, the root of a word, and the word itself can, and often do mean entirely, and sometimes even the OPPOSITE of the root. An example of a very different one would be Islam. Said to be the "religion of peace", because it has the root "salam" which means peace, but Islam means "submission", and due to they way Islam works, and spread, this would be submission through conquering. Hardly "peaceful". I have a full refutation to Seely's work here http://creation.com/is-the-raqiya-fi...t-a-solid-dome
This was done by James Patrick holding, and he has his own forum here on TWeb.
Wattsr1, I gave some of it, and I will give more, but I am going to take a little time to make sure I get it right. You do understand that, right?Last edited by Cerebrum123; May 28th 2012 at 10:44 AM.
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May 28th 2012, 10:46 AM #107
Re: Who wrote this?
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I didn't take it as an attack on me (I forgot the smiley after my "low blow" line).
Watch out with Roy ... he will twist and distort and alter and never concede regardless
of how much evidence you present. The harder you try to "get your information straight',
the more time you will waste on him. If I should read a post of his genuinely conceding
the point that you are making, I will retract what I've just said. Any bets?
Jorge"Though He slay me, yet will I trust in Him." Job 13:15
"Choice trumps knowledge" JAF
Macroevolution: Unmitigated extrapolation coupled with unrestrained imagination generously sprinkled with wishful desires.
Macroevolution: If you don't think about it, it makes a lot of sense.
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May 28th 2012, 11:03 AM #108
Re: Who wrote this?
You know those two examples aren't anything close to equivalent, even if one were to accept your premise concerning Islam, right? That's just not how etymology works.
Holding has never much impressed me. His cart is all too often put before his horses. Take this example:
Whereas Seely is working inside the text, armed with knowledge of what contemporary cosmologists thought about the sky, Holding, being just as bound as Seely is to the idea that God had to be separating something in the sky, argues that the author(s) of the Creation account recorded that God was separating atomic elements invisibly suspended in the air! Not that he or they would understand what was being recorded:
So Holding, grasping to inerrancy as hard as he can, makes numerous attempts in his essay to dismiss Seely's argument by saying that God knew the technical details of what was being written but hid such knowledge for the authors so that what they misunderstood in the recorded history would be seen by us moderns as accurate descriptions of atomic theory.
It's simply not a believable argument — it's certainly not plausible. It's the opposite of Occam's Razor in a situation that the Razor was made for.
—Sam"Rats and roaches live by competition under the law of supply and demand; it is the privilege of human beings to live under the laws of justice and mercy."
► Wendell Berry"As soon as men decide that all means are permitted to fight an evil, then their good becomes indistinguishable from the evil that they set out to destroy."
► Christopher Dawson
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May 28th 2012, 01:27 PM #109
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May 28th 2012, 01:31 PM #110
Re: Who wrote this?
Last edited by rogue06; May 28th 2012 at 01:33 PM.
Always strive to keep an open mind – but not so open that your brains fall out!Still afeared of & dodging The PINTM
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May 28th 2012, 05:23 PM #111
Re: Who wrote this?
Which one, Roland? The first — that Darwin, Hutton, and Lyell, were trying to explain away the idea of God — is surely conspiracy theory. Makes me think of a guy with legs sprawled across the sidewalk complaining that somebody stepped on his ankle, on purpose. Shouldn't have had his legs blocking the path to begin with. That's the only statement I find hard to swallow.
The rest of it looks mostly right, if phrased hysterically. Lyell was prominent among the host of 19th century geologists whose studies were misled by Biblical geology, especially the flood tales. He had good reason to wish science freed from Moses. And the conflict between Darwin's discoveries and his sensitivity to his wife's beliefs is well known. Calling it "hiding" is socially autistic. Simple human kindness toward one's spouse demands tactful presentations.
None of the flaws of the DH can make Mosaic authorship more probable. At best, we'd have two failed theories, where previously there was only the one. Your source is a bit high-strung. He also misrepresents, likely deliberately, the real objection to Mosaic authorship of the Hebrew sacred texts. The problem isn't that writing was unknown in 1400 BCE, but that the Hebrew language, especially the language used in the Torah, had not yet emerged. it's simply absurd to claim scholars writing about the origins of the Bible would be that ignorant of writing in the ancient world. It's well known that writing was introduced to the region at the end of the fourth millennium or beginning of the third millennium BCE.
Hebrew, however, was not. One can't write a book in a language that hadn't yet emerged. In fact, the earliest abecedary for Hebrew we have is in Phoenician script, likely from the mid-10th century BCE.
A is for Ancient
alphabet.583.192.jpg
As ever, JesseThere is no lao tzu.
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May 28th 2012, 05:47 PM #112
Re: Who wrote this?
So quotes like these from Darwin supporters don't lend any credence to this?
Micheal Ruse
‘Evolution is promoted by its practitioners as more than mere science. Evolution is promulgated as an ideology, a secular religion—a full-fledged alternative to Christianity, with meaning and morality. I am an ardent evolutionist and an ex-Christian, but I must admit that in this one complaint—and Mr [sic] Gish is but one of many to make it—the literalists are absolutely right. Evolution is a religion. This was true of evolution in the beginning, and it is true of evolution still today.
‘… Evolution therefore came into being as a kind of secular ideology, an explicit substitute for Christianity.’
Sir Julian Huxley
‘Darwin’s real achievement was to remove the whole idea of God as the creator of organisms from the sphere of rational discussion.’
Professor Steven Jay Gould
‘Darwin constructed the theory of natural selection in large measure as a direct refutation of the argument from design’.
This one isn't from a Darwin supporter, but from someone who was reviewing Darwin's Origin of Species.
Professor Adam Sedgwick
‘From first to last it is a dish of rank materialism cleverly cooked and served up…And why is this done? For no other reason, I am sure, except to make us independent of a Creator.’
Not to mention his arguments against the God of the Bible calling Him a "revengeful Tyrant".
I'll try to respond to the rest later, but this one caught my eye.
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May 28th 2012, 06:04 PM #113
Re: Who wrote this?
Last edited by DuraGizer; May 28th 2012 at 06:16 PM.
O God, I could be bounded in a nutshell and count myself a king of infinite space, were it not that I have bad dreams.
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May 28th 2012, 06:09 PM #114
Re: Who wrote this?
As I noted back at post #69 "Unfortunately history shows that many scientific advances are treated as attacks on religion in some quarters" and showed how in the case with Newton and gravity that some of his supporters did the same thing that you cite here:
Btw, you left out the quote from Richard Dawkins that is probably the most notorious.
And as to the quote by Ruse... I used to have a nice link, "Michael Ruse on the misuse of his religion comments" where he discusses how his remarks have been misinterpreted but it is no longer a working link
Essentially his actual position is the same that has been expressed by those who could be described as TEs over the years such as Benjamin Warfield, the biblical inerrantist par excellence and whose influence can be seen in the Chicago Statement on Biblical Inerrancy, who expressed it well during his class lectures on evolution prepared in 1888 & used until at least 1900:
Another influential defender of evangelical doctrine, vocal critic of theological liberalism and a contributor to The Fundamentals, James Orr, also contrasted between naturalistic/materialistic evolution and evolution itself maintaining that God supernaturally guided the evolutionary process leading to humanity (the position advocated by Alfred Wallace -- the co-discoverer of the ToE).
Similarly when John Paul II issued his statement on evolution in his address, "Truth Cannot Contradict Truth" in 1996 he clearly distinguished between "materialist, reductionist and spiritualist interpretations," rejecting as "incompatible" with Scripture views, for example, that "consider the spirit as emerging from the forces of living matter or as a mere epiphenomenon of this matter."
Even some of those cited as opponents of evolution appear to have held this view when asked to elaborate. For instance Charles Hodge said in "What is Darwinism" that evolution by chance is atheism (p156), but he did in fact allow evolution, "If God made them it makes no difference so far as thequestion of design is concerned how he made them; whether at once or by aprocess of evolution." (p95). He rejected naturalistic or materialistic views of evolution but accepted that evolution might be established and directed by God.
It is the purely naturalistic/materialistic views of evolution (such as that promoted by Richard Dawkins) that TEs reject and that Ruse is describing in the quote as being like a religion.
That Ruse recognizes this distinction is seen in his later works such as "Is Evolution a Secular Religion?" where he distinguishes between evolution and what he termed "Darwinism" (much in the manner that Orr did) and places much of the blame for confusion on Thomas Henry Huxley and his desire for reform in Britain.
Ruse feels that Huxley saw the Anglican Church as being the primary opponent to social change and reforms in the country and thinks he therefore "saw the need to found his own church" based upon naturalism and employed evolution to this end. This apparently is what he meant when he complained that evolution was "promulgated as an ideology, a secular religion—a full-fledged alternative to Christianity, with meaning and morality" from the beginning.
IOW, Ruse clearly distinguished between "professional evolutionary biology: mathematical, experimental, not laden with value statements" and "evolution as secular religion, generally working from an explicitly materialist background and solving all of the world's major problems, from racism to education to conservation." It is the latter view that TEs have consistently rejected.
This is why Ruse concluded: "if the claim is that all contemporary evolutionism is merely an excuse to promote moral and societal norms, this is simply false. Today's professional evolutionism is no more a secular religion than is industrial chemistry" (emphasis added)Last edited by rogue06; May 28th 2012 at 06:10 PM.
Always strive to keep an open mind – but not so open that your brains fall out!Still afeared of & dodging The PINTM
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May 28th 2012, 06:19 PM #115
Re: Who wrote this?
"Rats and roaches live by competition under the law of supply and demand; it is the privilege of human beings to live under the laws of justice and mercy."
► Wendell Berry"As soon as men decide that all means are permitted to fight an evil, then their good becomes indistinguishable from the evil that they set out to destroy."
► Christopher Dawson
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The following tWebber says Amen to Ansgar Seraph for this useful Post:
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May 28th 2012, 06:38 PM #116
Re: Who wrote this?
That's an amusing viewpoint, but not one I find biologists, or even Ruse supporting. C, what you need to watch for is creationist sources quote-mining and supporting dishonest behavior. The "[sic]" behind the reference to Gish as "Mr." is a giveaway. No one outside creationism views Gish's diploma mill doctorate as any more meaningful than $2595's.
I think this paragraph, the introduction to a book review (for which I was never paid) in a Canadian newspaper some 10 or so years ago, has received more attention and more repetition (especially on the Internet) than anything else I have ever written. More even than my claim that morality is an illusion put in place by the genes to make us social animals. No matter that I qualified it then and have qualified it before and ever since. "Ruse recants! Evolution is a religion! Read all about it!" Or more accurately, don't read all about it, because then you might find that that is not quite all that I had to say.
That's from Is Darwinism a Religion? by, yeah, you guessed it, Michael Ruse. This is called citing the source of text written by someone else so as to avoid plagiarism. That's what you've done here, by the way. It's an academic no-no, and frowned on on the boards, too, but coming from someone who thinks that the "Mr." in front of Gish is in error, I'm hardly surprised.
Bad habits are socially infectious.
And well it should be. There is no rational discourse possible after inserting God into such a conservation. But Huxley is not speaking here of Darwin's intent, but rather the effect of his discoveries. He was born five years after Darwin died. I sincerely doubt they spent much time discussing the finer points of his scientific motivations.Sir Julian Huxley
‘Darwin’s real achievement was to remove the whole idea of God as the creator of organisms from the sphere of rational discussion.’
True. But in even larger measure as a direct refutation of the idea of the fixity of species. Neither of which are grounds for claiming he was intent upon explaining away God. To the contrary, refuting false arguments used to support a belief system can only benefit the belief system. That is assuming there are good arguments available as well.Professor Steven Jay Gould
‘Darwin constructed the theory of natural selection in large measure as a direct refutation of the argument from design’.
Poor Sedgwick. He opened up the box of geological time, and was then appalled by what came out. But surely there are no lack of Christians similarly appalled by the doctrine of eternal damnation. Most of them, in fact. If Darwin was opposed to this doctrine, and Sedgwick supportive, it speaks well of Darwin alone. It has no bearing on God and his actions, except as proposed by those who feel a need to "get even" with the unbelievers and assume their God must therefore feel the same.This one isn't from a Darwin supporter, but from someone who was reviewing Darwin's Origin of Species.
Professor Adam Sedgwick
‘From first to last it is a dish of rank materialism cleverly cooked and served up…And why is this done? For no other reason, I am sure, except to make us independent of a Creator.’
Not to mention his arguments against the God of the Bible calling Him a "revengeful Tyrant".
I'll try to respond to the rest later, but this one caught my eye.
The letter from which this quote is taken lacks necessary detail which Darwin himself apologizes for omitting in the letter itself. It is clearly an abbreviated aside on the way to explaining his personal beliefs, which by then he identified with the newly-minted term "agnosticism."
If you'd care to leave a citation for your above source in your next reply, it would be appreciated.
As ever, JesseThere is no lao tzu.
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May 28th 2012, 06:48 PM #117
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May 28th 2012, 07:22 PM #118
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May 28th 2012, 07:37 PM #119
Re: Who wrote this?
This thread has become very interesting to me. I admit I had never quite visualized the contest here this way. I'd always seen it as a battle between those who understood what evolution is, and those whose religion had pretty well short-circuited any real understanding. After all, in the many years I've been reading this stuff I have never once seen a single creationist attack against what practicing biologists understand evolution to be.
So this perspective is fascinating - evolution-the-science, accepted by those trying to understand what all the empirical evidence is telling us about biological processes and history, against evolution-the-social-and-religious-doctrine, accepted by those who see their comfort threatened by something opposing it directly on a social or religious playing field. And I can see that for this to happen, evolution-the-science must be uprooted and transported to that playing field, even when this transplantation process leaves nothing but a rather absurd caricature by the time it's replanted and ready to attack.
And so what such as Magellan, Jorge, Cerebrum123 and others are rejecting and dismissing bears no substantive relationship with the scientific theory, or any of the scientific concepts underlying that theory. In fact, I sincerely doubt that ANY theories, ideas, or concepts make sense to such people UNTIL they have been transplanted onto familiar territory, however much insult must be done in the process. Asking what scripture has to say about genetics is like consulting Aristotle to understand quantum entanglement. The only way to do this is to put genetics into scriptural terms (if anything of genetics can survive this), or putting quantum entanglement into Aristotelian terms, with the same danger.
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May 28th 2012, 09:45 PM #120
Re: Who wrote this?
Maybe you could do a bit of objective, empirical observation on your own memory - try to sort out fact from fiction. I have never rejected or dismissed scientific theory or the concepts underlying that theory. Quite the opposite. I have used science and mathematics to show that some disciplines - especially Evolution - are shams.
For an example refer to 'Are we apes - a mathematical approach. ' That was not a dismissal nor a rejection. All you have to do is to have an empirical, objective gawk at any of the threads I have started . None dismiss. They all analyse.
I know it makes you feel good to repeat the same hogwash over and over - but it 'Is not a good look'. Next time, at least quote me. You wouldn't want to end up like poor old Rogue , would you?
Magellan
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